If free is inexpensive enough for you, you can make a "switch machine" out of a paper clip.

Most turnouts have a nail hole in a tie between the throw bar and that end of the turnout. If not, you can drill one. There is also a hole in the middle of the throw bar. Eyeball the distance between those two holes (roughly 1/2 inch on an Atlas #4). Eyeball the thickness of the tie strip (maybe 1/16 inch). You're going to make a spring, each end of which goes in one of the holes we talked about above. Cut a piece of paper clip so that it is the length between the two holes plus twice the depth of the tie strip plus about an 1/8 to a 1/4 inch. In our example that would be roughly 3/4 to 7/8 inch.

Using a pair of needle nose pliers, bend the two ends down 1/16". These two little legs will go into the nail hole and throw bar. Put a bend into the middle of the wire so that when you look down on it, it makes a shallow V. Adjust that V until the little legs fit into the holes. The length of the wire determines how strong the spring is. You want just enough springiness to keep the points pushed solidly against the stock rails. If the legs are too long and stick out below the ties, you can dress them with a file.

To throw the turnout, just flip a point rail with your finger. Good luck and have fun. Once you've made a couple of these, it becomes very easy.

I didn't ask for a brand number. I asked for the manufacturer and I asked for the code, in HO scale it is usually either code 83 or code 100, but occasionally it is code 70. The code is the height of the rails.And just as a side note I think you have to be 13 to use the forum.

Okay, so you have E-Z track, all Bachmann E-Z Track is code 100. Now my next question is would you be opposed to using code 100 track with a cork roadbed cut to mesh with the E-Z track? If not then your options are much more limited.

The only way to obtain manual Bachmann turnouts that do not come with the ability to be powered is the E-Z track expander set. But, Atlas and Model Power offer cheap manual turnouts in code 100 so, as long as you can put roadbed under the track to make it the same height as the E-Z track, they'll do fine.